ADAM PARFREY
(12 April 1957 -10 May 2018)
was an American journalist, editor, and the publisher of Feral House books, whose work in all three capacities frequently centers on unusual, extreme, or "forbidden" areas of knowledge.
Parfrey left the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1979. He moved to San Francisco and began a short-lived experimental magazine, IDEA, which published two issues. He also wrote and performed in a play about Gilles de Rais called “The Wickedest Man in the World" (1983). Later in 1983, Parfrey began work at New York City's Strand Bookstore. In 1984, with co-worker George Petros, he began EXIT Magazine Parfrey worked with Petros for three of the six published issues.
Back in Los Angeles, Parfrey co-founded Amok Press with Kenneth Swezey in 1986. Amok's first release was an English translation by Joachim Neugroschel of Joseph Goebbels's novel Michael. 1987 saw the release of Apocalypse Culture. Apocalypse Culture is a collection of articles, interviews, and documents that explore the various marginal aspects of culture. It has been reprinted twice, once in 1990, and again in 2001 by Parfrey's Feral House. In 2000 the sequel Apocalypse Culture II was released.
The book has been widely campaigned against and has been banned in many countries.
The partnership of Parfrey and Swezey as Amok published 9 books, including:
You Can't Win by Jack Black, The Grand Guignol: Theatre of Fear and Terror by Mel Gordon,
and Boxcar Bertha, with an Intro by Kathy Acker.
Adam Parfrey co-founded the independent publishing company Process Media
with Jodi Wille of Dilettante Press in 2005.
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